Poems ✍️

  23.10.2025
  9


Author: Thanksgiving Day

Totem



 




By Eamon Grennan








All Souls’ over, the roast seeds eaten, I set   

on a backporch post our sculpted pumpkin   

under the weather, warm still for November.   

Night and day it gapes in at us

through the kitchen window, going soft

in the head. Sleepwalker-slow, a black rash of ants   

harrows this hollow globe, munching   

the pale peach flesh, sucking its seasoned   

last juices dry. In a week, when the ants and   

humming flies are done, only a hard remorseless light   

drills and tenants it through and through. Within,   

it turns mould-black in patches, stays   

days like this while the weather takes it   

in its shifty arms: wide eye-spaces shine,   

the disapproving mouth holds firm. Another week,   

a sad leap forward: sunk to one side

so an eye-socket’s almost blocked, it becomes

a monster of its former self. Human, it would have   

rotted beyond unhappiness and horror   

to some unspeakable subject state—its nose   

no more than a vertical hole, the thin   

bridge of amber between nose and mouth   

in ruins. The other socket opens

wider than ever: disbelief.

                                        It’s all downhill

from here: knuckles of sun, peremptory

steady fingers of frost, strain all day and night—

cracking the rind, kneading the knotted fibres   

free. The crown, with its top-knot mockery   

of stalk, caves in; the skull buckles; the whole   

sad head drips tallowy tears: the end

is in sight. In a day or two it topples on itself   

like ruined thatch, pus-white drool spidering   

from the corner of the mouth, worming its way

down the body-post. All dignity to the winds,   

it bows its bogeyman face of dread

to the inevitable.

                           And now, November almost out,   

it is in the bright unseasonable sunshine

a simmer of pulp, a slow bake, amber shell speckled   

chalk-grey with lichen. Light strikes and strikes   

its burst surfaces: it sags, stays at the end of   

its brief tether—a helmet of dark circles, death caul.   

Here is the last umbilical gasp, everybody’s   

nightmare parent, the pitiless system

rubbing our noses in it. But pity poor lantern-head   

with his lights out, glob by greasy glob

going back where he came from: as each seed-shaped   

drop falls free, it catches and clutches

for one split second the light. When the pumpkin   

lapses to our common ground at last—where   

a swaddle of snow will fold it in no time

from sight—I try to take in the empty space it’s left   

on top of the wooden post: it is that empty space.








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